A novel and unique method for treating skin burns by grafting cultured cells to the wound surface is described. The major graft elements are allogeneic human fibroblasts rather than keratinocytes. Experience with its use in 222 severely burned patients, including those after early surgical necrectomy, showed this method to be an effective means of treating "borderline" third-degree burns. Epithelialization times were shortened from 31+2 days to 8.4+0.9 days. When the method was combined with dermatoautoplasty using a 1:6 perforated netted skin flap, the epithelialization period decreased from 20+2.3 to 12+1.3 days. The method proved to be highly effective in the treatment of slowly healing wounds in donor areas. It is concluded that the advantages of the proposed method -high efficacy, the much lower costs (in comparison with other methods) because no expensive nutrient media or growth biostimulators have to be used, and the very short time required to obtain a graft from allogeneic fibroblasts -argue for its wide use in clinical practice.
We evaluated the efficiency of transplantation of cultured human allofibroblasts onto tympanic membrane damaged by mine explosion in combination with Tampograss dressing (Paul Hartman). Transplantation of cultured human allofibroblasts was effective in 100% cases. Application of the film with fibroblasts onto perforation occupying from 1/4 to 1/2 of the tympanic membrane was more effective by 15% (by 59% in subtotal perforation) than tympanoplasty with amnion membrane. The mean duration of tympanic membrane restoration after spontaneous healing and amnionoplasty is virtually the same, while transplantation of allofibroblasts accelerated the process in comparison with other groups in perforation of any size; in subtotal defect the duration of tympanic membrane restoration was shorter by 14 +/- 1 days.
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